Anastasio Somoza

Encyclopedia of World Biography
COPYRIGHT 2004 The Gale Group Inc.

Anastasio Somoza

The Nicaraguan dictator and military leader Anastasio Somoza (1896-1956) used his position as commander of the national guard to overthrow the government in 1936, and he assumed the presidency in 1937. He ruled Nicaragua as a personal fief and was a hated symbol to many democrats.

Anastasio Somoza, born in San Marcos on Feb. 1, 1896, to Julia García and Anastasio Somoza, a coffee planter, received primary education in his village. After attending the Instituto Nacional de Oriente in Granada, Nicaragua, he went to Philadelphia to study at the Peirce School of Business Administration. While in Philadelphia he met his future wife, Salvadora Debayle, of a prominent Nicaraguan family. Returning to Nicaragua, he entered business; not very successful, he took various jobs before entering political life.

During the Liberal revolution against Emiliano Chamorro and Adolfo Diaz (1926-1927), Somoza joined the Liberal cause. When the Liberals returned to power after the United States-supervised election of 1928, Somoza rose in Nicaraguan politics. Reports attributed this rise to his talent as an interpreter during negotiations ending the revolution and to his charm and dancing ability.

Offices held by Somoza included administrator of taxes and, later, governor of the department of León, minister to Costa Rica, and undersecretary and secretary for foreign relations. When the United States prepared to withdraw marines and turn officerships in the United States-trained
national guard over to Nicaraguans, President José Moncada selected Somoza as commander.

After marine withdrawal on Jan. 2, 1933, and after the guerrilla chief Augusto Sandino made peace with the government in February, strong hostility developed between Somoza and Sandino. This animosity climaxed on the night of Feb. 21, 1934, when members of the national guard abducted and shot Sandino, who was in Managua.

When Somoza, maneuvering for the presidency, became convinced that President Juan Bautista Sacasa was attempting to stall his bid for the high office, he forced the President and the Vice President to resign in June 1936. Following an interim government Somoza was inaugurated on Jan. 1, 1937, after his election in December.

Somoza occupied the presidency until 1956, with the exception of one term, when Leonardo Argüello was allowed the office in 1947. Argüello, too independent, was ejected and replaced by one of Somoza's aged uncles, Victor M. Román y Reyes. Somoza resumed the presidency in 1950, after his uncle's death.

While attending a banquet in León on Sept. 21, 1956, celebrating his renomination by the National Liberal convention, Somoza was shot by Rigoberto López Pérez. Somoza died on September 29 in Panama and was buried in Managua.

Further Reading

Manuel Cordero Reyes, Nicaragua under Somoza (1944), is a short anti-Somoza essay by a former Nicaraguan public official.
Some discussion of Somoza is in a number of general works: John D. Martz, Central America: The Crisis and the Challenge (1959); Neill Macauley, The Sandino Affair (1967); and William Kamman, A Search for Stability: United States Diplomacy toward Nicaragua, 1925-1933 (1968). □

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Somoza, Anastasio

The Columbia Encyclopedia, 6th ed.

Copyright The Columbia University Press

Anastasio Somoza(änästä´syō sōmō´sä), 1896–1956, president of Nicaragua (1937–47, 1950–56). After the end (1933) of U.S. military intervention in Nicaragua, he rose to power as head of the national guard. Though himself a member of the Liberal party, he engineered (1936) a successful coup against the incumbent Liberal regime. In 1937 he formally assumed the presidency. In 1947 he withdrew, but before a month had elapsed he ousted his successor and installed a puppet president. He was accused (1948) by Costa Rica of aiding a group of rebels bent on overthrowing the liberal regime in that country. The Organization of American States investigated the charges, ruled in favor of Costa Rica, and reprimanded Somoza. Undeterred, he had himself reelected in 1950 over the ineffectual opposition of Emiliano Chamorro and continued his dictatorial rule and provocations against Costa Rica. He maintained, however, very cordial relations with the United States. On Sept. 21, 1956, he was shot; eight days later he died. His son, Luis Somoza, succeeded him to the presidency.

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Somoza García, Anastasio

Somoza García, Anastasio (1896–1956) Nicaraguan dictator. In 1934, as director of the National Guard, Somoza had Augusto César Sandino killed. In 1937, he ousted President Sacasa and assumed the presidency. Somoza created both a dictatorship and a political dynasty; he was succeeded in office by his two sons, Luis and Anastasio. The Somoza regime was overthrown in the Sandinista revolution (1979).

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